Friday, August 24, 2012

Houston, You Have a Problem (Worst 50-Game Stretches in Baseball)

Yes, that was just about the most obvious headline in history. There simply weren't any other quotes from "Apollo 13" that worked well, and when I woke up this morning, I swore I'd work a quote from a mid-90s Tom Hanks movie into a headline. I thought it might be something from "That Thing You Do," but that's not how things shook out.

The Houston Astros are bad this year, really bad. Entering today, they're 39-86, which is easily the worst record in baseball, and puts them on pace for a 51-111 season. The last team to do that poorly was the 2004 Diamondbacks. Houston has just gotten worse as the year has gone, especially after trading away what little they had to offer other teams at the deadline. Over their last 50 games, the Astros' record stands at 7-43.

Every team goes through good patches and bad patches during a season, but 50 games can hardly be called a "patch," and 7-43 goes far beyond what might be considered "bad." I found myself wondering if Houston had ever had a stretch of baseball quite that awful. Before this season, the Astros worst ever 50-game stretch came in at 11-39, so they've cleared that by a pretty good distance.

Once I knew this was well beyond any such stretch of baseball Houston had ever had, I started to look at how this run might stack up against the worst runs in modern baseball history (which dates to 1901, when the American League was formed). It turns out, this current mess of baseball being played by the Houston Astros is tied as the third-worst in modern history.

I repeat...

THIS IS THE THIRD-WORST 50-GAME STRETCH IN MODERN HISTORY.

The only teams to ever lose so many games over that portion of the schedule:

The 1915 Philadelphia Athletics, the 1916 Philadelphia Athletics, and the 1937 Philadelphia Athletics

Hooray for the Philadelphia Athletics!!!

The 1937 team had a stretch where it won just 6 of 50 games. The 1916 team though, that was a bunch that knew how to lose, they went just 4-46 over 50 games. In fact, from May 24th and August 8th, they went an incredible 6-63 (so they had a bunch of 4-46, 5-45, and 6-44 stretches in there).

Among all 30 teams, the Rockies have the "best" bad stretch, they've never gone worse than 14-36 over any 50 games. Of course, they've only been around for twenty years, so they have an advantage. The Pirates hold the record for "best" bad stretch among the teams that have been around all the way back to 1901, at 12-38.

Here is every team's worst 50-game stretch:

Angels: 11-39 (1999)

Astros: 7-43 (2012)

Athletics: 4-46 (1916)

Blue Jays: 11-39 (1979)

Braves: 8-42 (1923)

Brewers: 12-38 (1969, 1975)

Cardinals: 8-42 (1907)

Cubs: 10-40 (1999)

Diamondbacks: 8-42 (2004)

Dodgers: 11-39 (1905, 1944)

Giants: 8-42 (1902)

Indians: 11-39 (2012)

Mariners: 12-38 (1980)

Marlins: 11-39 (1998)

Mets: 9-41 (1962)

Nationals: 12-38 (1969, 1976)

Orioles: 9-41 (1954)

Padres: 9-41 (1969)

Phillies: 8-42 (1961)

Pirates: 12-38 (1952)

Rangers: 9-41 (1961)

Rays: 13-37 (2002, 2005, 2007)

Red Sox: 8-42 (1932)

Reds: 11-39 (1914)

Rockies: 14-36 (1993, 2001, 2005, 2012)

Royals: 12-38 (2006)

Tigers: 8-42 (1996)

Twins: 8-42 (1949, 1982)

White Sox: 11-39 (1932)

Yankees: 9-41 (1909)

Further evidence that losing ain't what it used to be, among the 16 original teams, 9 of them had their worst 50-game stretch at least 80 years ago (the Athletics, Braves, Cardinals, Dodgers, Giants, Reds, Red Sox, White Sox, and Yankees).

Who knows how bad things will look by the end of the year. Houston could end up losing 30 of its last 37 games and finishing 46-116, which would be the worst record in the National League in fifty years. They could also rebound, win 19 of these last 37 and end up at 58-104, which would still be the worst record in the league, but not historically bad. In any case, they've already accomplished that no team but the Philadelphia Athletics ever experienced.

1 comment:

No surprise about the Athletics. The Mack Men were victims of selloffs on several occasions by the penurious Mr. Mack. The 1915-1916 edition of the team was formed when Mr. Mack refused to compete with the salaries offered by the fledgling Federal League.

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I've been a huge baseball fan since I got my first mitt at the age of five. Like any good blogger, my earliest writing came from inside my parents' basement, where at the age of seven I put together newspaper articles to cover the games I played with my vast collection of baseball cards. I love going to games at whatever stadium I find myself near, and can often be found staying up way later than I ought to, watching the end of a late game from the west coast. I also teach elementary school, run a lot of miles, see a lot of movies, and daydream about being Han Solo. I can be reached at jasonlukehart@gmail.com